Somewhere else: social connection and dislocation of Ethiopian migrants in Johannesburg |
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Authors: | Tanya Zack Yordanos Seifu Estifanos |
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Affiliation: | 1. Planning Department, School of Architecture and Planning, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africatanyazack@icon.co.za;3. University of Oldenburg, European Masters in Migration and Intercultural Relations (EMMIR) Consortium, Oldenburg, Germany |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACTThe meaning of personal relationships for Ethiopian migrants to Johannesburg is shaped by individual connections, by imported social networks that are adapted in the host city, and by the particular conditions of livelihood creation in the emerging Ethiopian entrepreneurial enclave of ‘Jeppe’. In their migration individuals experience both rupture and reconnection – with relatives, as well as through relationships and networks that constitute social capital in Johannesburg. The social world of Ethiopian migrants in this entrepreneurial enclave is complex. Many social connections and dislocations are affected by the life choices in which income generation and economic relations are the primary aim and social relations are necessarily secondary. Others are influenced by the strength of informal social networks that serve the needs of Ethiopian migrants. And, far from ‘here’ and ‘there’ being connected through the use of technology and advanced connectivity, ‘home’ and Johannesburg are experienced as quite separate and different places. |
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Keywords: | Jeppe Ethiopian migrants Johannesburg |
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